The first one was the release of the 970/980
Second was the release of the 960.
third and final was the 980ti.
The Nano is the only chip that looks interesting in the AMD lineup, but 2 or 3 months away, it might be too late.
1. 970 doesn't compete with $550+ cards
2. 980 has no hope of competing with Fury PRO or X.
3. 960 has nothing to do with this pricing segment. For brand objective users, it was irrelevant for gaming from day 1 as 280X and 290 are better gaming cards.
4. We still don't know how the pair or Fury PRO/X cards perform to claim that 980Ti nailed them.
5. You completely ignored dual-Fiji card launching in the fall. NV has no response to that right for now.
Wow that's gotta be one hellava air cooler to cool a overclocked Fury!
> 11,500 posts and you still don't know that you can have an air cooler than can easily tame 350W of GPU power in overclocked states while running < 75C?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwRWi3Bz0qc
They are killing themselves now.
More doom and gloom from armchair financial advisors. Just what we needed.
Suddenly the dots connect.
Yes they do. If the entire AMD stack was 50% faster and cost 50% less than each NV's product, AMD would just gain market share back close to 50% and not much more. Considering the market bought $200 960 2GB that's 50% slower than a $250 R9 290 4GB, how are you not connecting the dots?
You now how many people buy Honda Civic and Toyota Corolla? Best selling cars in their class but are basically garbage compared to VW Golf or Mazda 3. Sales do not always mean the product was worth buying. Only a person who doesn't care about car safety or a person 100% ignorant about all things automotive would buy a Toyota Corolla with rear drum breaks in 2015 but boy
millions of people do.
Brand name/marketing would still ensure 980Ti could outsell an AMD card 20-30% faster and you know it. Just be man enough to admit it. AMD destroyed NV for 6 months with HD5850/5870 and market share still didn't go to 75% like it is now for NV. AMD has the perf/watt crown with HD4000, 5000 and 6000 series and it took NV 6-9 months to roll-out Kepler top-to-bottom. Heck, the fact that most PC gamers ignored bitcoin mining that made AMD cards free and they made thousands of dollars is enough proof brand name, marketing and awful knowledge of tech for the average PC gamer is what drivers sales. This is the only generation in the last 20 years I can think of where people are buying 750/750Ti and foregoing the R9 270/270X which are 30-45% faster for $20 more. This is the only generation I can think of where people are buying a $200 960 with gimped VRAM, a card that's SO overpriced, even $360-400 960 SLI can't beat an after-market 290. That's truly pathetic that 960 still sells well. Marketing and consumer ignorance FTW.
NV even managed to sell GeForce 5 and 7, both far inferior to ATI's offerings of that time. NV is like Apple. They have great/excellent products but even if they release turds, they still sell well. Cards like FX5200, GTX550/550Ti, 650/650Ti and 960 are pure trash and sell well. That's evidence in itself the types of
gamers buying these cards are clueless/brand driven.
Therefore, it's a foregone conclusion that when it comes to market share and sales 980Ti would beat AMD's Fury even if AMD beat 980Ti in
every metric. When I was working in Asia for 2 years, in some countries, you can't even buy AMD cards. You'd have to order them to that country's store from China. Why? The store owner would tell me no one here buys NV. The same country where people think Coca Cola, Heinz Ketchup, Levi's jeans, NIKE shoes, Apple products and Toyota/Lexus are the best products in the world. So many people are brand brainwashed in 3rd world countries, it's mind blowing. Just like Audi sells very poorly in the US but Audi owns BMW/Mercedes in China is 100% proof that brand name and marketing dictates most premium/non-essential consumer purchases in today's world.
I am pretty sure if Fiji was an NV product, you'd be saying how outdated 980Ti is for using that junky reference blower, outdated GDDR5 tech and
requiring after-market versions just to keep up with a reference Fury X at high-rez gaming.